What have you learned from your e-bike experiences?

I have learned not to wave at guys on dino bikes dressed in their kit. They despise us.. Not all of them but it's a pretty fair generalization.
That hasn't been my experience, and I live in a place crawling with both serious roadies and ebikers. There are plenty of friendly riders and jerks in both camps.

Best that we all deal with each other on an individual basis and skip the generalizations. I wave at most cyclists. Ebikers are no more likely to wave back.
 
That hasn't been my experience, and I live in a place crawling with both serious roadies and ebikers. There are plenty of friendly riders and jerks in both camps.

Best that we all deal with each other on an individual basis and skip the generalizations. I wave at most cyclists. Ebikers are no more likely to wave back.
if i waved at every passing bike, i’d never have my hands on the bars :)

on a long ride far from the city, i will give a friendly gesture, which is almost always reciprocated. sometimes just a nod or a hand signal.
 
also, they need to fit snugly - without movement, there is no friction. the movement goes between the shorts and the saddle, not between the shorts and the skin.

have you done the specialized sit bone measure thing?
Yes, the bike shorts I usually wear are snug (typical lycra design), and that's what I'll wear exclusively going forward.

Measured for the SQlab saddle on my commuter, but that may be irrelevant in this case. The stock Specialized Bridge saddle on the problem bike (my Vado SL 1) felt great from the outset ~2,700 mi ago, and has never been an issue till this episode, which I now think was all about shorts, not the saddle.
 
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I've actually had dino bike riders spit at the ground when they pass and see I'm on an ebike. Of course it takes all kinds and some will be very friendly but don't count on it
 
I have learned not to wave at guys on dino bikes dressed in their kit. They despise us.. Not all of them but it's a pretty fair generalization.
I've learned that this behavior depends mostly on where and when I ride. I go to rural or semi rural locations and avoid weekends & holidays. By doing this, most of the people I encounter are older, like minded individuals and not hard core roadies.
 
Yes, the bike shorts I usually wear are snug (typical lycra design), and that's what I'll wear exclusively going forward.

Measured for the SQlab saddle on my commuter, but that may be irrelevant in this case. The stock Specialized Bridge saddle on the problem bike (my Vado SL 1) felt great from the outset ~2,700 mi ago, and has never been an issue till this episode, which I now think was all about shorts, not the saddle.
The proper saddle width, particularly if it was derived from measurements, is your proper saddle width. Shapes, cutouts, flat or sloping long or short nose, all those details are preferences based on your riding position. The width is the width no matter what bike you're on.

I agree with your conclusion. Wear high quality padded shorts or tights and keep them clean. Shower within an hour after riding. Watch for irritation and back off until it heals. I've always used triple antibiotic when something flares up. It will go away within a day or two.
 
I've learned that this behavior depends mostly on where and when I ride. I go to rural or semi rural locations and avoid weekends & holidays. By doing this, most of the people I encounter are older, like minded individuals and not hard core roadies.
I guess you could say that I'm a hard core roadie. My favorite riders to smile and wave to are small children. Kids on bikes make me happy. As for the adults, some ignore me on the Cannondale, others acknowledge and check it out. It will be very interesting to see if the reaction is different on the Pinarello, which looks very much like an analog bike.
 
My attitude and experience differ from some of you. Most of my rides are on sparsely populated trails and (mostly) lightly-traveled roads. But, I think I’m similar to Jeremy… with a little more detail as follows:

1. I hate road riding. I am the opposite of @stompandgo. I agree with his comment about loving to see kids out there, etc. But, there are a lot of particularly unfriendly motorists out here in central Massachusetts, and I’ve had some bad encounters that have (luckily) not ended in me getting chased into the woods or something worse… In any case, unless I’m getting a friendly wave (not the finger, that is) from a motorist, I do not make eye contact or initiate anything. I ride the “with traffic” direction (on the right, that is) , and there are very often minimal shoulders where I ride, though I try to stay to the right of the white line if I can — sorry UKers if this makes no sense to you :) .

2. I occasionally run into asshats riding bikes too quickly (both regular and e-bikes) on the areas of populated trails that I ride every day. These people almost never make eye contact or wave. These people only get frowns from me.

3. In most other cases I keep it down around 10-11MPH and I am always waving, saying hello, and warning pedestrians (or saying “on your left/right/down-the-middle) at a distance when I’m coming up on them. Fättie is an imposing beast and I don’t want to scare pedestrians.

4. I’m usually not passing other bike riders (of any time) unless there are no pedestrians around and I’m going faster (15-20 on the trails) or we’re going in opposing directions. Almost always a wave or a hello in those cases.
 
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